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1. Evaluating ecological benefits of oceanic protected areas.

2. Planting exceptional tropical tree species to increase long‐term carbon storage in assisted secondary succession.

3. Fish aggregating devices could enhance the effectiveness of blue water marine protected areas.

4. Evidence-Based Causal Chains for Linking Health, Development, and Conservation Actions.

5. Fuzzy Models to Inform Social and Environmental Indicator Selection for Conservation Impact Monitoring.

6. Conservation in a Wicked Complex World; Challenges and Solutions.

7. Six Common Mistakes in Conservation Priority Setting.

8. An interoperable decision support tool for conservation planning

9. Incorporating climate change adaptation into national conservation assessments.

10. Informed opportunism for conservation planning in the Solomon Islands.

11. Accommodating Dynamic Oceanographic Processes and Pelagic Biodiversity in Marine Conservation Planning.

12. Dynamic marine protected areas can improve the resilience of coral reef systems.

13. Pelagic protected areas: the missing dimension in ocean conservation

14. Policy Relevant Conservation Science.

15. Should We Protect the Strong or the Weak? Risk, Resilience, and the Selection of Marine Protected Areas.

16. THE STABILITY OF P IN CORAL REEF FISHES.

17. The sound of a tropical forest.

18. Broadening the focus of forest conservation beyond carbon.

19. Retaining natural vegetation to safeguard biodiversity and humanity.

20. Pelagic MPAs: The devil you know

21. Importance of equitable cost sharing in the Convention on Biological Diversity's protected area agenda.

22. Developing a two‐way learning monitoring program for Mankarr (Greater Bilby) in the Western Desert, Western Australia.

23. A return-on-investment framework to identify conservation priorities in Africa.

24. Phenotypic covariance at species' borders.

25. The need for speed: informed land acquisitions for conservation in a dynamic property market.

26. Including indigenous knowledge in species distribution modeling for increased ecological insights.

28. How do practitioners characterize land tenure security?

29. Using soundscapes to investigate homogenization of tropical forest diversity in selectively logged forests.

31. Corrigendum to "Using Landsat observations (1988–2017) and Google Earth Engine to detect vegetation cover changes in rangelands - A first step towards identifying degraded lands for conservation" [Remote Sens. Environ. 232 (2019), 111317].

32. Using Landsat observations (1988–2017) and Google Earth Engine to detect vegetation cover changes in rangelands - A first step towards identifying degraded lands for conservation.

33. Crowdfunding biodiversity conservation.

34. The cost of enforcing a marine protected area to achieve ecological targets for the recovery of fish biomass.

35. Improving the transparency of statistical reporting in <italic>Conservation Letters</italic>.

36. Incorporating Land Tenure Security into Conservation.

37. Using soundscapes to detect variable degrees of human influence on tropical forests in Papua New Guinea.

38. Designing coastal conservation to deliver ecosystem and human well-being benefits.

39. Operationalizing resilience for adaptive coral reef management under global environmental change.

40. A Multidisciplinary Conceptualization of Conservation Opportunity.

41. Systematic Conservation Planning: A Better Recipe for Managing the High Seas for Biodiversity Conservation and Sustainable Use.

42. Evaluating Perceived Benefits of Ecoregional Assessments.

43. Planning for reserve adequacy in dynamic landscapes; maximizing future representation of vegetation communities under flood disturbance in the Pantanal wetland.

44. Monitoring does not always count

45. Prioritizing Land and Sea Conservation Investments to Protect Coral Reefs.

46. Is conservation triage just smart decision making?

47. Plan S and publishing: reply to Lehtomäki et al. 2019.

48. The sound of logging: Tropical forest soundscape before, during, and after selective timber extraction.

50. Finite conservation funds mean triage is unavoidable

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